Lucy Vickery

Spectator competition winners: poems with a twist

The latest competition called for poems with an ingenious twist at the end. Though popular, this challenge turned out to be deceptively tricky and while there were many accomplished and enjoyable entries, none of your twists truly blew my socks off. Paul A. Freeman kept it short and topical:

Was it things that go bump in the night, or an earthquake’s formidable might?       I have to confess       that it’s anyone’s guess coz Boris’s lips are shut tight.

Douglas G. Brown, Max Gutmann and Martin Elster were unlucky runners-up. The six below romp home with £25 each. Derek Robinson The deadly battle is renewed each morning; The enemy, entrenched within the field, Defeated for a while at each day’s dawning, Regroups by night, yet I shall never yield. I arm myself with blades that need no honing To face the war that must be fought each day, Steeling myself against the anguished groaning And cries of pain that permeate the fray. Blood must be shed; the slicing and the gashes, The foamy mass that falls upon the ground, The cuts and thrusts, the sallies and the clashes, The blackened stumps that tumble all around. A time may come when shaving’s done by laser; Till then, I’m stuck with this confounded razor. Sylvia Fairley ‘He nibbled the lobe of her cowrie-like ear while whispering words no one else was to hear, ‘the skin is so smooth, it’s like silk on my lips,’ and he nuzzled her ear with affectionate nips. ‘What joy! I’m enchanted,’ he took a small bite, ‘so perfectly formed — yes, an aural delight: like the shell of an oyster, it’s pearly inside, those provocative coils leave me helpless,’ he       sighed. ‘There are so many facets I want to explore in the delicate organ I’ve come to adore; it’s all that is left of the breaker of hearts — I’ve disposed of the rest of her bodily parts.’ Alan Millard I’m honoured as a lifelong friend to praise the       bridegroom, Ben, And tell the bride I know her man will outshine       other men. Though most expect the Best Man’s speech to       tarnish and subvert The bridegroom’s reputation and to dish up all the       dirt On past misdeeds, immortal sins and all his       wayward ways, The bride will be surprised to hear I offer only       praise. For Ben’s a budding Romeo, romantic to the core, His touch will be as tender as the wavelets on the       shore. His warm embrace will soothe her pain, his words       will calm her fears, His searching eyes and loving sighs with move her       soul to tears. His kisses will taste sweeter than the rarest ruby       wine, No truer love a bride could find — no better       valentine. He’ll swear she’ll be the only one he’ll cherish and       adore Declaring that he’s never felt such love as this       before. And if the bride should doubt my word, as new       brides often do, Ask any girl who’s here today — she’ll tell you       that it’s true! David Silverman All Hallows’ Eve — Ah, bitter chill! — was       dawning; I saw pale hellish lips all gaping wide; Pale harbingers intoned their horrid warning: ‘The doom you wished for beckons!’ they all cried. And ‘Trick or Treat? O, which spell did you choose? Who bewitched you into Taking Back Control — O Albion! Perfidious your Muse — Of all except your senses and your soul? No Beadsman here to pray and intercede, To count your woes and by opposing end ’em, To see your changèd mind and then to plead At last for sense — a second referendum!’ But quoth the corby: ‘Nevermore!’ Appalled, I saw pale Boris! Tossed and turned, and screamed: ‘La Belle Dame Sans Deal hath thee in her thrall!’ Then turned the news off, went to bed and dreamed. Basil Ransome-Davies I gazed at her. I couldn’t help but feel That she would hurt me if I got it wrong. I could imagine getting a raw deal, But still and all the world was full of song. The others at the table — did they sense The taut-strung, blended energies that ran Between us like electric filaments? She had me on a knife-edge. Man, oh man. Nobody spoke. Faces were grim with stress. A gambler should not be a woman’s slave. What lay in store only a sage could guess — A cosmic romance or a Boot Hill grave? She badly needed me to make a call; Her eyes said it, those eyes of amethyst. I wanly glanced around the village hall And tossed a mental coin and muttered, ‘twist’. Katie Mallett I remember summers When days were dry and warm And now and then to clear the air There’d be a thunderstorm. I remember summers When everyone would lie And sunbathe anywhere they could, Not thinking they might die. I remember summers When skies were dull and grey And rain drove tourists from the beach To other kinds of play. Yes, I remember summers Spent in seaside bars. But summers are just memories Now I live on Mars. Your next challenge is to submit a short story entitled ‘The last bumble bee’ (up to 150 words). Please email entries to lucy@spectator.co.uk by midday on 25 July.

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